New Superconductor Found "Immune To Magnetism"
Lisandro sends in news that testing of the new class of superconductors we discussed a while back (compounds of iron, lanthanum, and rare earths) has turned up a major surprise: magnetism doesn't shut off the superconducting state. Magnetic fields represent one of three factors that limit expanded applications for superconductors (the others are current density and temperature dependence.) The research will appear in Nature; here's a preprint (PDF).
Resistance is ductile.
No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
"Ah Crappp!!!" - Magneto, 2008
That's really neat and all, but please let me know when they find something that's immune to gravity, as it's essential to a project I'm working on. (I have a deadline.)
Internal resistanceless batteries would make any kind of short circuit very exciting.
But useful for McGuyver!
Dang. It's starting to show that I've left science and gone into computers.
If only they'd expressed it in powers of two (e.g. 2^16).
So by the transitive property of puns: Ductile is Futile.
Northeastern Montana, for one. Right where I live.
Yeah, until Yellowstone blows.
...PUNY HUMANS
The sooner we wipe out imperial units the better
.1337.
Just don't tell today's kids that the number of cubic feet in a gallon is
Weeks of coding saves hours of planning.